TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14,1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Wilson Asks U.S. Ouster From Europe Diagram Program Regulating Take-over Of Technology, Trade LONDON (P)-Prime Minister Harold Wilson issued an urgent appeal last night to the six Com- mon Market countries to join Bri- tain in creating "a vast and power- ful European technology" to halt a U.S. takeover of European in- dustry. The prime minister said the problem was too .urgent, too vital to Europeans to be delayed while Britain negotiates its entry into. the Common Market. In a speech to= the annual ban- quet at Guildhall of London, the capital's financial district, Wilson outlined a program which he said his government will pursue with the Common Market. He appealed to British industry and trades unions to back him in his sweeping proposals for "indus- trial partnership and industrial integration." There is no future for Europe, or for Britain, if we allow Ameri- can business and American indus- try to so dominate the strategic growth industries of our individual countries, that they, and not we, are able, to determine the pace and direction of Europe's indus- trial advance," Wilson declared. He said he was not proposing "costly government-financed ven- tures" such as the joint British- French construction of the Con- corde airliner. "The test of effective European cooperation must be industrial partnership and industrial inte- gration based on pooling the re- search, development and produc- tion of viable and strategic eco- nomic enterprises," he said.- He mentioned the fields of com- puters, electronics and nuclear power. "We are ready, too, to embark on urgent multilateral discussions with our European partners, de- signed to create a new dynamic in European technology. We are pre- pared to go as far and as fast as-and indeed perhaps further and faster than-any country in Europe in preparing the techno- logical cooperation and integra- tion that can give a new impetus to a European economic union." Wilson sugested 'formation of a multilateral European institute of technology to point the way, and urgent talks on means of forming "truly European com- panies" operating across national borders. U.S. Sailors ON JOURNEY HOME: Ask Refuge Communists Release Three i In Japan After Request from King, Spock -Associated Press SGT. DANIEL PITZER, left, of Spring, Lake, N.C., and Sgt. 'James Jackson, of Talcott, W.Va., answered questions at New York's Kennedy Airport last night after leaving the plane that brought them on their last leg of freedom from a Viet Cong prisoner of war camp. SECURITY COUNCIL DEBATE: Israel, Jordan Battle in UN, Refuse to- Modify Positions UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (R) - Israel and Jordan, meeting face- to-face in Security Council de- bate, stuck to their tough no- compromise positions yesterday on a Middle East settlement. Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban declared that what his gov- ernment sought "and what the international community should promote is not a meaningless for- mula" but rather "the conclusion of peace treaties by direct nego- tiations between Israel and th'e Arab states." He said a peace settlement ne- gotiated directly between the two sides was "not only possible but inevitable." Foreign Minister Abdul Monem Rifa'i of Jordan, showing none of, the conciliatory tone evident in public statements of Jordan's King Hussein in the United States last week, reiterated Arab de- mands for the withdrawal of Is- raeli forces from the Arab terri- tory seized in the six-day war last June. Israeli withdrawal, he said, is a prerequisite to peace. If the United Nations fails to act, he warned, we will have to take the necessary action "to liquidate this Israeli aggression.' Eban said Israel would main- tain and respect the cease-fire that ended the June fighting "until it is replaced by peace treaties ending the state of war and ensuring a stable and mu- tually guaranteed security." He once again flatly rejected a resolution submitted to the coun- cil by India, Mali and Nigeria, because, he said, it. suggested "that Israel should move from the cease-fire lines without a peace treaty defining permanent and secure frontiers." He also criticized a rival U.S. resolution for failure to "give suf- ficient weight to the concept of negotiation and agreement." The Israelis, however, are believed will- ing to accept the U.S. formula. Rifa'i told the council that the Arab attitude was not the sourcej of instability in the Middle East. He contended the instability stemmed from Israel's "record of expansionist policies." The Security Council will meet again Wednesday on the Middle East question. Four from Intrepid Go A WOL; Oppose U.S. Role in ietnarm TOKYO ()-A Japanese peace group announced Monday the de- fection of four U.S. Navy men from the 7th Fleet carrie Intre- pid because they oppose Ameri- can involvement in Vietnam. It said the men had asked for po- litical refuge in Japan or any other country not involved in the war. The Japan Peace for Vietnam Committee showed a movie in which four Americans in civilian clothes read statements which said they did not want to take part in the war. The Intrepid is stationed off Vietnam and its planes fly bombing missions over the North. The peace group identified the men as John M. Barrilla, 20, an airman; Richard D. Bailey, 19, airman; Michael A. Lindner, 19, airman apprentice, and Craig W. Anderson, 20, airman apprentice. In the film, entitled "The In- trepid Four," the youth who identified himself as Barrilla said he had lived most of his life in Baltimore, and the one who said he was Anderson listed his birth- place as San Jose, Calif. The other two made no mention of their home towns and the peace committee said it could not give them. Joint Statement In the film Bailey read what was described as a Joint state- ment of the four. "We believe that further esca- lation in Vietnam will eventually lead to a direct confrontation with China, resulting in a world war," the statement said. "We oppose the war as true Americans, not affiliated with any political party. "We face military disciplinary action as a result of our beliefs; therefore, we s e e k political asylum in Japan, or any other country not engaged in the war." The peace committee said the film was made Nov. 1. Young in Japan The Japanese peace group said a representative of a group it called "The American Peace Movement" came to Japan last week and talked to the men It identified him as Prof. Ernest P. Young of Dartmouth College. The group also said the word of the defections had been sent to David Dellinger in the United States. Dellinger heads the U.S. Na- tional Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam. He helped organize the antiwar dem- onstrations outside the Pentgon in Washington last month. The U.S. Embassy in Tokyo said it had not been informed of the four men's defection. The Japa- nese Foreign Ministry said Japa- nese law agencies would search for the men and arrest them if the U.S. government asks that this be done. AWOL from Intrepid A U.S. Navy spokesman said the four men named by the peace committee were absent without leave after the Intrepid left for Vietnamese waters Oct. 25. She had been in Yokosuka to give her crew a week's recreation and rest. In Baltimore, Barrilla's sister- in-law, Mrs. Frank Barrilla, said Barrilla's mother had received mailed notification Monday of her son's absence from duty and that she was "very much upset." PARIS (A") -- Three U.S. Army three U.S. Army sergeants as a sergeants released by Vietnamese gesture of goodwill toward Ameri- Communists at the request of Dr. can Negroes. Martin Luther King and a group He said 11 civil rights workers, of ten other American civil rights including singer Joan Baez, Dr. workers began the final leg of Benjamin Spock and himself, had their journey home Monday ac- cabled the North Vietnamese gov- companied by a U.S. State De- ernment asking for the men's partment official and Thomas release on humanitarian grounds. Hayden, a member of King's "We appealed to the humani- group. tarian instincts of the North The three left Phnom Penh' Vietnamese," King said. "At it Cambodia. Sunday, the day fol- happened, two of the three were lowing their release there, accom- Negroes." panied by Hayden. Speaking at Newcastle-on-Tyne, The men are M. St, Edward R. England, King said yesterday that Johnson, who has been reported the North Vietnamese released ill with dysentery and malnutri- Court Martial Convicts Anti-War NYegro Soldier SAN FRANCISCO (,) - A She and two others were general court martial Monday quickly ejected by MPs and the convicted Pvt. Ronald Lockman, spectators were warned to main- 23, of refusing to obey orders to tamn decorum. go to Vietnam. A colonel ordered them arrested The court deliberated only 11 and as they were being led away minutes at the end of a trial that they started struggling. Shortly, erupted in violent confrontation military police were rolling on between civilian spectators and the pavement with several dem- military police soon after Lock- onstrators. In all, nine demon- tion, S. Sgt. James E. Jacksoi Jr and M. Sgt. Daniel Lee Pitzer. Hayden, a former Daily editor and a community organizer in Newark, had his passport revoked early in 1966 after he made a trip to Hanoi without official authori- zation by the State Department. Even though the passport had never been reinstated and Hay- den now lacks "all valid travel documents," the State Depart- ment announced, "we appreciate Hayden's role in facilitating the release of these men." Asked what official action might be taken up on Hayden's arrival, a spokesman said the United States has not made a decision. The men refused to speak to anyone, including reporters, on their way home. "They have told me they do not want to make any statements or be photographed." commented the U.S. Embassy official who is accompanying them. "They are under great pressure. They just want a chance to talk to their' supervisors in the Defense De- partment before anyone else." Approached by a reporter on the flight from Rome to Paris, Pitzer shook his head at ques- tions. Hayden insisted that he himself had no official role in the affair. Of his part in their release in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Hayden would only say: "I helped facili- tate their departure so they could go home to see their families and government officials." UAW Pr ods Labor Force Back to Chrysler Factories man had pleaded a loud and clear "not guilty." Lockman, a Philadelphia Ne- gro, declares he refused an order Sept. 15 to go to Vietnam because he believes the war is illegal. He was convicted on two counts, one carrying a penalty of five years and dishonorable discharge and the other a one-year term. The entire proceedings were marked by clashes between MPs and protesting demonstrators both inside and outside of the court. The trouble outside the court room was a follow up to an inci- dent that occurred in the court room with the trial barely begun. The trial counsel had just handed around specifications of the charges against Ronald Lock- man of Philadelphia, 23, when a man among the 60 spectators in the court suddenly shouted, "This trial is illegal and unconstitu- tional." He identified himself as Richard Chariper, 42, of Los An- geles. The trial had been underway about an hour when two civilians among the 75 who were gathered outside and could not get in ask- ed MPs for permission to enter. They were refused. The two withdrew from the en- trance and started using abusive language in loud voices, NEW HAVEN, Conn. {gP-About 400 members of the Yale Univer- sity faculty have signed a "peti- tion for peace" that calls on President Johnson to halt the bombing of North Vietnam "un- conditionally and at once." Johnson was urged in the peti- tion to bring an "end to destruc- tion and this nightmare war" through negotiations with Hanoi and the National Liberation Front. , The petition appeared in Thursday's edition of the Yale Daily News, the undergraduate newspaper. The signers represent about one-fourth of the estimated 2,000 faculty members. The Vietnam conflict, it said, is "pulverizing" Vietnamese cul- ture and is "contrary to the best interests of the United States." The petition asks Johnson to' represent "the vast majority of the people of the United States who elected him because they wanted peace and trusted him to keep it. That same majority wants peace and magnanimity now. The signers include Dean Louis H. Pollack of the Yale Law School and author John Hersey who is master of Pierson College. strators were arrested. Inside, the trial continued de- spite the disturbances. Lockman, whose mother and fiance were present, was asked, "How do you plead?" At that point a Negro girl in the audience -screamed, "How can you begin?" Yale Staff Signs Peace Plea World News Roundup By The Associated Press WILLIAMSBURG, Va. - The Episcopal clergyman who preach- ed a sermon to President Johnson calling for a "logical, straightfor- ward explanation" of Vietnam policy sought shelter Monday from a whirlwind of controversy. The Rev. Cotesworth Pinckney Lewis, rector of historic Bruton Parish Church, was defended by his bishop, criticized by congres- sional leaders and the cause of a letter of apology from Virginia Gov. Mills E. Godwin Jr. to the President. The minister, besieged by calls for amplification of his sermon- including one caller from Aus- tralia '- declined further inter- views, indicating he felt his in- tentions had been misinterpreted and he wished to bow out of the spotlight. * * * WASHINGTON - The House defeated Monday a Republican-led effort to slash $660 million from the $2.06 billion .requested by President Johnson for the anti- poverty program. Speaker John W. McCormack (D-Mass.), leading the attack on the GOP amendment, said a cut of the size being proposed would "constitute a fatal attack on this most worthy program.." *.- * * LAGOS, Nigeria - In the first heavy fighting reported in, three weeks, federal troops have beaten back a Biafran bid " to retake the secessionist capital, Enuga, Ni- gerian army sources said Monday. The attack came at the week- end as the federal government appointed Ibo administrator, Uk- pabi Asika, appealed to Ibos to return to the captured capital. Enugu remains virtually de- serted as the 150,000 population, mostly Ibo tribesmen, fled before the federal army which took the city Oct. 4. DETROIT UP) - United Auto Workers officials yesterday push- ed to get their 103,000 members at Chrysler Corp. back on the job. "We'll have a lot of them back," a union spokesman said, but he expressed doubt that all striking union members would return to work. Parts shortages and local un-_ ion disputes in Michigan and Illi- nois kept 26,300 hourly wage workers at Chrysler off the job yesterday. A nationwide strike against Chrysler, the UAW's second tar- get this year, was averted last Wednesday night when the com- pany and the union reached agreement on new contracts cov- ering the firm's 95,000 hourly rated workers. But at General Motors, the UAW's third target, three one- day walk-outs were held in at least three plants, apparently in protest of the company's stock- piling of vehicles in preparation. for a possible strike. UAW Presi- dent Walter Reuther is seeking three-year contracts with all of the Big Three automakers. Bargainers are still working on contracts at 56 of the 136 Chry- sler locals that have not come to terms on individual plant agree- ments. The Chrysler contract closely parallels that won by the UAW at Ford where workers got rough- ly a dollar an hour more in wages and fringe benefits over the pre- vious Big Three level of $4.70 an hour. The UAW's contract at Chrysler also will give Canadian workers wages equal to the U.S. scale by mid-1970. Reuther told delegates to the union's national Chrysler coun- cil Saturday to get their members back to work. "If they (union members) want the leadership of this union to fight their battles when the com- pany is wrong, then they have to expect the leadership of this un- ion to stand up to them when they're wrong," Reuther said. "They're wrong." The council voted to recom- mend that the membership ratify the new national contracts. No ratification date has been set. GM plants affected by the one- day walk-outs were in Saginaw,' Pontiac, and Doraville, Ga., a GM spokesman said. In Saginaw, two of five GM plants, which make steering gears, were idled yesterday. A spokes- man for UAW Local 699 said the union was protesting the firm's scheduling of overtime. THE IDEA OF THE UNIVERSITY r I 11 I Nov. 13-17 11 J 4 jhi, eer at 'flIF ARK 8:30 P.M, 1421 Hill Street STARTS TOMORROW AFTER "HELP" Wednesday - DEBATE - "Should the Peace Corps Be Suspended in view of the present U.S. Foreign Policy?" Thursday-IMAGES OF THE USA-Three Drama Pro- files-Was the unknown soldier a nigger, a mick, a kike, a wop, or a wasp?" Fridayand MICHAEL COONEY doing songs of all shapes and sizes from blues to children's songs, traditional ballads, to topical songs, playing banjo, 6 and 12 string guitar, pennywhistle, uke, arnd kazoo. v _1 I i I COME TO COUNT NITE TOMORROW, NOV. 15 7:00 P.M. BY A STRIKING AND ORIGINAL TRAGI-COMEDY STDSTRKLwith- MART HULSWIT ® Starring M4IOO 'SN!A. BARBAAUH.J'Q)